Recently, testing network points has increasingly felt like shifting from "practice" to "expected income," and once your mindset changes, it's easy to get carried away. The mempool is full of repeated transaction interactions, looking like those early rush hours at subway entrances—more and more crowded, with slippage and gas fees that some people just grit their teeth and pay.



My own stop-loss is pretty simple: treat it as a fitness check-in, not a salary. Set a maximum amount of time and transaction fees for each project; if it exceeds, stop. Even if I think "just one more try will do," I won't add more funds. And those on-chain data that immediately seem inflated, or studios entering in bulk—that's quite similar to the spiral of chain games—once everyone only focuses on output, what's left is just mutual competition and panic selling. For now, that's it. If I have points, I have them; if not, I won't risk myself.
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